Pharmaceutical industry often employs polyethylenimine (PEI) for large scale protein production processes by transient transfection of mammalian cells. PEI condenses plasmid DNA (pDNA) by spontaneously forming positive nanoparticles known as polyplexes. Condensed pDNA is favoured for cell surface binding, internalization and protection from intracellular nucleases. While most of the cells efficiently uptake polyplexes, only 5 to 10% of captured pDNA reaches the nucleus for transgene expression. This suggests that polyplexes are hampered in their ability to route and to translocate to the nucleus necessitating large amounts of polyplexes to achieve high expression levels. By contrast, many viruses can efficiently transduce cells with only one or a few viral genome copies. Viruses have evolved to exploit cellular internalization and routing properties to express their own genetic material. We hypothesized that less pDNA would be used in an optimized transfection process if we exploited the internalization and routing properties that viruses use. DNA binding proteins could be used as an alternative to PEI to transfect mammalian cells. However, their usage is marginal due to the large protein quantities required to bind pDNA for transgene expression. If less pDNA is used less binding protein is needed.
In this study, we used the E/Kcoil system to target a membrane receptor to deliver pDNA in mammalian cells. The Ecoil and Kcoil are two repeated heptapeptides which interact with a high affinity and specificity to form coiled-coil structures. We fused the Ecoil with a recombinant pDNA-binding protein. The Kcoil was fused to a stably-expressed membrane receptor in HEK293 cells.
We discovered that low sulfation of the cell surface reduced non-specific binding of the pDNA:protein complex and permitted targeted binding via the E/Kcoil interaction. We demonstrate how to use recombinant pDNA-binding protein and the E/Kcoil system for targeted transgene delivery. This newly developed system provides a new transfection method, with reduced pDNA-binding protein quantities needed to achieve transgene expression.